A 59-year-old woman with lobular breast cancer was referred to nuclear medicine department for a 68 Ga-FAPI PET/CT study after completion of treatment to rule out the possibility of metastatic disease. It revealed a lytic lesion showing increased FAPI accumulation in the right acetabulum, highly suspicious for bone metastasis. In comparison to an initial 18 F-FDG PET/CT study done 2 years before, the lytic lesion showing no FDG uptake in the right acetabulum remained unchanged, and the findings were consistent with bone cyst. This case highlighted that benign bone cyst may demonstrate increased 68 Ga-FAPI uptake mimicking bone metastasis on 68 Ga-FAPI PET/CT.
Prostate cancer is one of the leading causes of cancer death in men. The prognosis in prostate cancer is greatly worsened by the presence of metastases, which are most commonly found in bone, lung, liver, and brain. The peritoneum is an extremely uncommon metastatic site for prostate cancer, even in autopsy series. We present a case of FDG PET/CT demonstration of peritoneal metastasis from prostate cancer.
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